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GOD AND ME 



READY FOR THE PRESS 



Among the Gospels and the 
Ads 

Being Notes and Comments Covering the 

Life of Christ in the Flesh, and the 

First Thirty Years* History 

of His Church 

By 
PETER AINSLIE 



With the Opening of the Introduction by- 
Hon. GROVER CLEVELAND 



This Book will be from the Press by October 1, 1908 

PRICE $1.50 

All advance orders $1.00 per copy 

Address TEMPLE SEMINARY PRESS, Publishers 

Baltimore, Md. 



GOD AND ME 

Being a Brief Manual of the Principles 
that Make for a Closer Rela- 
tionship of the Believer 
with God 



By 
PETER AINSLIE 

n 



"The night is dark and I am far from land; 
I yield the helm, O! God, to Thy command. 
Be Thou my guardian and my refuge be; 
Shipwrecked and lost, I look to Thee, 
Great Pilot of the sea." 

— Rankin 



BALTIMORE: TEMPLE SEMINARY 
PRESS cTVICMVIII 

Copyright, 1908, by Temple Seminary Press 
FOR SALE BY ALL BOOK STORES 



ARY 0f*50N@HESS| 
Vwo Copies Keeew 

MAY 7 1908 



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|**_ copy' &...,_! ^ 
FOREWORD A^° 



This little book is designed for 
all believers in Jesus, and especially 
for those who have recently entered 
into the blessed relationship of 
adoption into the holy family of the 
heavenly Father, and so it may be 
called a primer for the beginners in 
Christian living. 

It must be understood that the 
term "me," as used in this book, 
does not refer exclusively to the 
author, but to you — any one who 
reads these pageS'-Vand the purpose 
of its use is to make more personal 
our relationship with the Father. 



CONTENTS 



PAGE 

Morning Prayer 6 

Belief 7 

Repentance 8 

Obedience 9 

Fruit-Bearing io 

Bible Study 13 

Prayer 16 

Thoughts 18 

Talking 19 

Temptation : 22 

Amusements 25 

Companions . . , 27 

Books 28 

Daily Rounds 29 

Finances 33 

Telling the Story 35 

Missions 36 

Sorrow 2>7 

Another 39 

Forgiveness 42 

Death 43 

Heaven 46 

Evening Prayer 48 




A MORNING PRAYER 

^HOU hast again lighted the hours 
of time, and it is another day, 
with its cares, irritations and op- 
portunities. 1$ Make us to live in 
sympathy — Thyself and me — that I may follow 
Thee in the downward steps of self-denial and 
may know the nearness of Thyself and the 
beauty of myself forgotten in my thought of 
Thee and those about me. ^ Give to me health 
of soul, clearness of vision and strength of mind 
that I may be calm amid vexations, hopeful 
amid discouragements and faithful however faith- 
less others may be. ^ Help me that I may see 
the open door although other doors may be 
closed, that I may never forget the path to the 
unfailing fountain and that I may practice Thy 
presence in order to be used by Thee through 
the day and to go to my bed undishonored by sin 
when my body is weary with sleep. €J Teach me 
forgiveness, contentment and peace and we shall 
not have walked the way in vain, for Thou still 
art God and I, a sinner saved by grace. ^ Amen. 



GOD AND ME 



Just as though there were none other in heaven but 
Him and no one else on earth but me, God and I are 
friends. He is as real as I am. God is a spirit, and the 
most important part of myself is my spiritual being, 
consequently there is a common ground upon which 
God and I have met, and, because He first loved me, I 
love Him. Henceforth my business is not to discuss 
Him nor to define Him in doctrinal formula, but to ex- 
hibit in my daily life His beauty and glory. 

I do not care anything about the theories of the fall 
of man ; I only know that I am among the fallen and 
He has lifted me up, reminding me that by His favor I 
have been saved through faith, and that not of myself. 



It is His gift to me. 






He has given me intellect, with its memory, imagina- 
tion and reasoning ; He has given me sensibilities, with 
their emotions, affections and desires; He has 
belief gj ven me w ii^ vjith its freedom, power and in- 
fluence — these are the things within me — the organs of 
my spiritual being, wherein strength and weakness lie, 
where choice for good or evil plays upon the dial of my 
personality. They are His gifts, but these are not 
alone. He has given me a plan of salvation expressed 
in Jesus, who long ago lived here on the earth, died on 
the Cross, arose from the dead and is now at the right 
hand of the Father. From Him comes strength for my 
weakness and mastery of my will that my choice may 
be both wise and abiding. 

I do not care about the theories of the Atonement, 
but it is o fact that Jesus died for the remission of my 
sins, and He arose from the dead for my justification, 
and I believe it, because I have heard the evidence, and 
belief comes by hearing. God gave me the power to 



8 GOD AND ME 

believe things; He gave me Himself to believe in, so 
that He and I might be companions ; consequently out 
of this lovingkindness a friendship has begun between 
God and me. 

He had confidence in me first, or He would never 
have given Jesus to die for me. I do not know why He 
loved me so, but He is God, and His love is so far 
above my love that I do not stop to attempt to reason it 
out. I rejoice in the fact that I have both His love and 
His confidence, out of which has come my love and my 
confidence toward Him. 

His words are just as live now as the day that they 
were first spoken. His promises are just as strong as 
when they were first made, and although He does not 
speak to me in an audible voice, He is just as personal 
in His dealings with me as when He dealt with Abra- 
ham, Joseph, David, Nehemiah, Peter and Paul. 

Because He does not deal with me as I think He 
ought to is no reason at all that He is not dealing with 
me in the greatest kindness. / am ignorant, and I must 
give up all my little ideas of God. Out of His word I 
must find out the principles of His dealings with His 
friends in the past, and then I will understand to some 
degree the specific cases of His dealings with me now, 
for God is always the same. Whatever comes, He is 
right and true and kind. He is not slack concerning 
His promises as some count slackness ; but He has been 
longsuffering to me, not wishing that I should perish, 
but that I should come to repentance. 

Out of His love, holiness and power, and because of 

my own sinfulness, unholiness and weakness, His 

Holy Spirit convicted me of sin — a divine 

repentance task _ and j acknowledge before God 

all my transgressions, for the contrast between Him 
and me so pained my soul that I could get no peace 
until I brought to Him a conscience-smitten spirit and 
a penitent heart — not mere sorrow for things done or 



REPENTANCE 9 

left undone, but abandoning of myself to God, involv- 
ing my personal guilt and my absolute helplessness. 

He has untaught me being ashamed of repentance 
and has revealed to me its manliness and dignity. Im- 
penitence is meanness to the core, but the nobility of a 
soul that sins is first seen when it turns to repentance 
and lingers not among the gravestones of its unholy 
past. It is the most pleasing of all the emotions — 
deeper than gratitude, higher than joy, more precious 
than peace, brighter than hope and sweeter than love. 
It is all these and more, as it walks along its roadbed 
of humility. TV is the one cry that has precedence in 
heaven over all others. Repentance toward God is al- 
ways greeted by love — never an exception. Once done, 
those sins are in the covered past ; but after-sins neces- 
sitate it being constantly done, for it is as necessary for 
the health of my soul as water is for my body. Repent- 
ance is my daily bath, for all my sins are first against 
God and secondarily against my fellow-men. Out of 
his broken heart David cried in his prayer to God, 
"Against Thee, Thee only, have I sinned and done that 
which is evil in Thy sight/' and only God can say, "I, 
even I, am He that blotteth out thy transgressions for 
mine own sake, and I will not remember thy sins." 
Conditions and time may partially erase it from my 
memory, but He has taught me that only penitence can 
blot out transgressions from between Him and me. 

The best thing that I ever did was to obey God, and 
obedience is at the basis of the friendship between Him 
and me; neither is there anything I can 
ever do that will exceed in worth simple 
obedience to Him. While there is no friendship with- 
out self-sacrifice — God sacrificing for me and I for 
Him — yet the giving of all my money to God or the 
sacrifice of the friendship of another or of my life for 
Him is not nearly so important as simple obedience to 
His word, for one of the earliest principles that God 



io GOD AND ME 

gave to one of my ancient brothers was "to obey is 
better than sacrifice." 

Love is misdirected if it does not shape itself into 
obedience. Jesus said, "If you love me, you will keep 
my commandments/' It is not a question whether I see 
the reason for it or not. I may not understand baptism, 
but that is no matter. I rejoice that of my own will I 
was baptized. Love does not choose which commands 
to do and which not to do. It does not demur, but in 
good humor obeys, regardless of consequences. It 
speaks as Mary did to the servants at the marriage in 
Cana, "Whatsoever He saith unto you, do it." 

Difficulties to obedience are rather imaginary than 
real, for all His commands are possible to all, and so 
they are possible to me. Surely I am under greater 
obligations to obey them as they appear in the Scrip- 
tures, irrespective of traditions or the opinions of 
others, than the soldier is to obey the orders of his 
superior officer; but too frequently I am ashamed of 
my lack of spiritual discipline by the side of a well- 
trained military man. Obedience is the beginning, and 
mutual friendship can only be maintained by its daily 
practice — not of the ten, but of all the commandments 
in His word. Greater than any human achievement, 
more sacred than the working of miracles is my soul's 
daily practicing of the principles of God. This must be 
done, else I will mar the language of love that is de- 
signed to pass between His heart and mine. I may fail 
at it often in the future, as I have often failed in the 
past, but the mark of my life must be set to try, and to 
try with all my might, for religion is not emotion nor 
the mere belief in correct doctrines, but it is a life in 
obedience with God. 

«<$* «<7* 

This is a world of products. As simple as two and 

two make four, or the apprentice makes the skilled 

mechanic, or the schools make the ac- 

fruit-bearing comp ii s hed scholars, so this cooperative 

work — God and me — makes the fruit of holiness — holi- 



FRUIT-BEARING n 

ness being from the old Anglo-Saxon word hal, mean- 
ing whole, from which comes both our English words — 
holiness and health; therefore, this cooperation pro- 
duces healthfulness of soul, without which I can never 
see God. "The fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, 
longsuffering, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, meek- 
ness, self-control" — not one of these apart, but all of 
these together is "the fruit of the Spirit." My friend- 
ship with God means that I am trying to attain to this. 
// can no more be produced instantly than can fruit on 
a tree or a finished education to a schoolboy. It takes 
time and the observance of certain laws for these; it 
likewise does the same to produce "the fruit of the 
Spirit." It means toil, time, disappointments, medita- 
tion, prayers, perseverance, failures, grace, triumphs, 
service, repentance, forgiveness, and after while "the 
fruit of the Spirit" ripened out of my imperfect life. 

The knowledge of my imperfections is an occasion 
for thanksgiving. A man who does not know and who 
does not know that he does not know is to be pitied. 
Said Ruskin, "Make sure that however good you may 
be, you have faults ; that however dull you may be, you 
can find out what they are; and that however slight 
they may be, you had better make some patient effort to 
get quit of them. . . . Therefore see that no day 
passes in which you do not make yourself a somewhat 
better creature; and in order to do that find out first 
what you are now. . . . If you do not dare to do 
this, find out why you do not dare, and try to get 
strength of heart enough to look yourself fairly in the 
face, in mind as well as in body." 

In this self-examination I must not have my attention 
attracted to another. It is I that am being looked into, 
and I know that I am imperfect, bearing many faults 
and the scars of great transgressions, so this gives me 
something to do wherever I am or whatever may be the 
circumstances surrounding me. It is clear to me that I 
have been brought into the schoolroom of His love to 



12 GOD AND ME 

be disciplined for service. The soul is cowardly and 
lazy. It has to be made brave and energetic. Out of 
this imperfect, blurred spiritual being, I am, by joint 
labor with God, to be made like Him. While the 
achievement is a long way off from the beginning, there 
is enough inspiration in the task to command all my 
energies. 

The museum at Rotterdam contains the first painting 
of Rembrandt. It is a rough, unartistic daubing, and at 
first I wondered why such a thing should be framed, 
until I read in the corner that it was the first painting 
of the great Dutch artist. On the other side were the 
masterpieces of his genius, and I found myself thinking 
of the boy faithfully applying himself to his passion 
through years of hardest toil, until I could see the great 
artist putting his finishing touches on "The Presenta- 
tion in the Temple" and "The Night Watch." A great 
distance intervenes between beginning and achieve- 
ment, but fidelity can bridge the chasm. Nothing wrong 
in human life is beyond correction if that life will bend 
faithfully to the task. I may not reach my ideal. Who 
does? But I will do my best, and He will add the 
crown. 

Worldliness, sensuality, resentments, unforgiveness, 
quarrels, discontent, jealousies, envyings, drunkenness, 
pride, oversensitiveness, neglect of the Bible, formal 
prayers, indifference to worship — all these things de- 
stroy fruit-bearing — even success in my business or in 
my profession may prevent fruit-bearing and so be my 
ruin. Only by the Holy Spirit, who dwells within me, 
can I put to death these deeds of my body. To say 
that I have to yield to some of these because of my 
peculiar disposition is no excuse. My disposition, like 
everything else in me, must be changed. I want a dis- 
position like God's, and I have come to Him to be en- 
tirely remade. 

If I loaf at my task or lose sight of my imperfections 
until I make some break by word or act, or I am re- 



FRUIT-BEARING 13 

buked by some friend or enemy, I must not get 
offended either at myself or another, for God has only 
waked me up that I might start to work again. / must 
not fail to thank Him for the rebuke, nor must I be dis- 
couraged, however imperfect I appear to myself. My 
practice of friendship and love to God must not slacken, 
for not only my life here will be weakened by it, but in 
eternity — the field where life is larger — I will not be 
able to be of such service to God as I have the capa- 
bility of being. I do not want to fail Him. The fruit 
of the Spirit will come. It may take longer in me than 
in another, as some orchards are later in yielding fruit 
than others, but I do not care for that — only so I pro- 
duce in my life "the fruit of the Spirit." 

The Bible contains the word of God, and in my read- 
ing He and I come face to face. I feel His breath upon 
my cheeks, for out of this book He speaks 

BIBLE STUDY ^ me ag thoug - h J t were first spo ken 

today and I were the first receiver of His message. It 
is at once the only book that feeds my soul. "Thy 
words were found and I did eat them ; and Thy words 
were unto me a joy and the rejoicing of my heart." 

There are two testaments — the Old and the New. 
In the former there are thirty-nine books and in the 
latter twenty-seven, making sixty-six in all. The Old 
Testament is divided into four parts : ( 1 ) The first five 
books are classified as the Law of Moses or Pentateuch, 
a Greek word, meaning fivefold book; (2) the next 
twelve are classified as history, being a history of the 
Hebrews from the time of Joshua to the return from 
the Babylonian captivity; (3) Job, Psalms, Proverbs, 
Ecclesiastes, Song of Solomon and Lamentations are 
classified as poetry; (4) the remaining sixteen are the 
books of prophecy, which clearly foretold the coming 
of Christ and the evidences attending His presence on 
the earth. Twenty-five great chapters in the Old Test- 
ament are: Gen. 1, 3; Ex. 3; Deut. 5, 6; Josh. 1; 



14 GOD AND ME 

I. Sam. 3; Job i, 2; Psa. 1, 19, 23, 51, 90, 103, 119; 
Prov. 3; Isa. 1, 6, 53; Jer. 17; Ezek. 18; Dan. 2; 
Zech. 14 ; Mai. 3. 

Fifty of the most helpful selections in the Old Testa- 
ment are: Gen. 1:26; 3: 15; 9: 13; 28: 16, 17; 45:5; 
Ex. 23:20; Nu. 6:24-26; Deut. 10: 12, 13; 18: 10-12; 
31:6; Josh. 24: 15; I. Sam. 2:30; 12:23; 15:22; II. 
Sam. 12 : 23 ; 24 : 24 ; Neh. 6:3; Job 16 : 19 ; 19 : 25-27 ; 
23:12; 28:28; Psa. 17:8, 15; 19:14; 25:4, 5, 7; 
32: 1, 2, 5; 35: 19; 37:4, 5; 39: 1; 51: 10, 11; 103: 10, 
13; 119: 11; 139:23, 24; 141:2, 3; Prov. 3: 6; 4: 5-9; 
6: 17-19; 21:3; Eccl. 12: 13, 14; Isa. 1: 18; 53:4-6; 
Jer. 9:23, 24; 15:16; Ezek. 3:18, 19; Dan. 2:44; 
12 : 3 ; Hos. 14 : 4 ; Mai. 3 : 8-10. 

The New Testament may likewise be divided into 
four parts : ( 1 ) The first four books are biographies of 
Jesus and are commonly called the Gospels; (2) the 
next is the book of Acts, and it is classified as history, 
being the history of the establishing and the first thirty 
years' extension of the Church of Christ; (3) the next 
twenty-one books are letters to churches and indi- 
vidual believers, dealing in a large variety of subjects 
and covering every phase of Christian experience; (4) 
the book of Revelation is apocalyptic, meaning some- 
thing revealed, being a prophecy in symbols of the 
Church throughout the ages to the consummation of all 
things. Twenty-five great chapters in the New Testa- 
ment are: Matt. 5, 6, 7, 16, 24, 27, 28; Luke 15; John 
1, 3, 14, 15, 16, 17; Acts 2, 8; Rom. 8, 12; I. Cor. 13, 

15 ; Phil. 2 ; Col. 3 ; Heb. 1 1 ; Jas. 1 ; Rev. 22, 

Fifty of the most helpful selections in the New 
Testament are: Matt. 1:21; 5:3-12; 6:7-15, 33; 
7: 12,21; 11:28,29; 12:36, 37; 22: 37-39; 28: 19, 20; 
Mark 8:35-38; Luke 12:15; 14:27-33; 17:4; John 
1:12; 3: 16,36; 11:25,26; 14: 13-15; 15:5; 16:7-11; 
17:21; Acts 1 : 1 1 ; 2 : 38 ; 4 : 12 ; Rom. 5 : 8 ; 8 : 13, 28 ; 
10:9, 10, 17; I. Cor. 10:13; 11:23-29; II. Cor. 5:1, 
10 ; 9:6, 7 ; Gal. 5 : 19-24 ; Eph. 4 : 4-6 ; Phil. 1 : 29 ; 



BIBLE STUDY 15 

4:19; I. Thess. 4:16, 17; II. Tim. 3:16, 17; Heb. 
4:16; 12:5-11; 13:5-8; II. Pet. 3:8, 17; I. John 
1 : 8-10 ; 2 : 15-17 ; 3 : 2 ; Rev. 3 : 21 ; 22 : 5. 

It is profitable to read these fifty chapters frequently, 
as well as others similar to them, and to mark with care 
these one hundred selections, besides as many more. 
/ could not spend my time in any better way than get- 
ting these passages to memory. God gave Joshua three 
rules for the study of the Scriptures — memorizing, 
meditating and doing. David said, "Thy word have I 
laid up in my heart, that I might not sin against Thee. ,, 

Both the Old and the New Testament are inspired 
of God. The first or Old Testament is largely a book 
of the Hebrews, containing their law, history and lit- 
erature, but at the same time it is the basis of the sec- 
ond or New Testament, and it contains prophecies of 
the coming of Christ and records instances of God's 
dealing with men and examples of human fidelity and 
uprightness. The New Testament is the book of pres- 
ent-day authority to all, both Hebrews and Gentiles, 
and so it is the book of absolute authority to me. The 
writer of the Hebrew letter said, "In that He saith, a 
new covenant, He hath made the first old. But that 
which is becoming old and waxeth aged is nigh unto 
vanishing away." Paul said, "Before faith came, we 
were kept in ward under the law, shut up unto the 
faith which should afterwards be revealed. So that the 
law is become our tutor to bring us unto Christ, that 
we might be justified by faith. But now that faith is 
come, we are no longer under a tutor; for we are all 
sons of God, through faith, in Christ Jesus." Jesus did 
not destroy the law; He fulfilled it. 

The Scriptures must be studied with common sense. 
To open the Bible at random, as one would throw a 
box of dice and select the first verse the eye falls upon 
as directly applicable to my special case, is neither 
sensible nor spiritual. The book of God must be read 
according to its classifications and studied with pains- 
taking care. One of the Psalms to preface the reading, 



16 GOD AND ME 

then a chapter or two, or sometimes even less than one, 
followed by a few moments of meditation, then a 
prayer of thanksgiving, confession and petition — this is 
daily food upon which the soul grows ; without this, it 
is incompetent for any task, be it large or small. 

To be on speaking terms with God is my greatest 

privilege. To pray — not publicly, as valuable as that 

may be, or in elegant language, as pleasing as 

prayer t j iat ma y k e tQ cu it urec [ earSj b u t simply to 

hold conversation with God, irrespective of where I am 
or who may hear me, like the man who, coming into 
the Temple in Jerusalem, said, "God, be Thou merciful 
to me a sinner" — just to pray is the sweetest condition 
of human life. 

Friends may talk over problems together, out of 
which may come wisdom, but no conclusion is best 
reached until the whole matter has been laid before 
God. To sit alone worrying over things that have been 
done, or that I fear will be done, does not help me and 
betrays distrust, for since God and I are friends all 
things work together for my good, and to tell Him all 
things that have a part of my thought puts me in a con- 
tinual conversational relationship with Him, which both 
pleases Him and proves my friendship. 

I am bound to this by all the courtesies of hospi- 
tality. He is my guest. For me not to remember that 
He is by my side, to lose consciousness of His compan- 
ionship, would reveal a breach of hospitality. This is 
the meaning of the exhortation, "Pray without ceas- 
ing" — a recognition of His presence, for He is as 
surely with me now as He is in heaven, so I must talk 
with Him more freely than friends talk with friends, 
for He is "a friend that sticketh closer than a brother." 

To fall asleep with the last thought ascending to the 
heavenly throne and for the first waking thought to fly 
into the bosom of God is conducive to health of soul 
and body. John Quincy Adams never went to sleep at 



PRAYER 17 

night until he had said that sweet child prayer, "Now 
I lay me down to sleep," and Sir Matthew Hale said, 
"If I omit praying and reading God's word in the 
morning, nothing goes well all day." 

Prayer is my speech to God — the language of my 
helplessness, the voice of my unholiness and the incense 
of my heart. It is the plea of the prisoner and the 
flight of the soul. Before it — the simplest prayer — all 
the doors of heaven open and God's ear comes close to 
the heart of His child. In its use man has accom- 
plished more things than by any other means. Not 
simply the normal has been developed beneath its 
breath, but by prayer the impossible has been done. 
Waters have been divided, armies scattered, fires 
quenched, the dead called back to life, human passions 
suppressed, and my own sinful heart has been washed 
and rewashed by His cleansing grace through prayer. 

Visions of things to be done often flash out of prayer 
in my soul and thoughts for another lead me to the 
throne of grace. 

"I cannot tell why there should come to me 

A thought of you, Friend, miles or years away 
In swift insistence on the memory, 

Unless, for you, it needs be that I pray. 

"You go your way, I mine ; we seldom meet 
To talk of plans or longings, day by day; 
Of pain or pleasure, triumph or defeat, 
Or special reasons why 'tis time to pray. 

"We are too busy even to spare thought, 
For days together, of the friends away ; 
Perhaps God does it for us, and we ought 
To read His signal as a call to pray. 

"Perhaps just then that one has fiercer fight, 
A more appalling weakness, or decay 
Of courage, darkness, a losing hold of right, 
And so, in case he needs my prayer, I pray. 

"Friend, do the same for me ! If I intrude 
In thought upon you, on some crowded day, 
Give me a moment's prayer, as interlude — 
Be very sure I need it, therefore pray. 



18 GOD AND ME 

"And as you bear my name before the Throne, 
Perhaps in prayer for you, /'// meet you there! 
Oh ! let us not neglect this holy gift — 
What blessings God hath wrought thro' prayer." 

God always hears and always answers if it is a 
prayer of faith, but frequently it is "no" rather than 
"yes" as would be the answer from a wise parent to 
the child's request — the heart itself is not ready for the 
gift, and so God waits while my heart is being trained 
in the discipline of delay. Sometimes the answer is 
within me, for I must always help God do what I ask 
for. While I take to Him petitions for my personal 
needs, / must never sin against God in failing to pray 
for others — His church, my brethren and whosoever 
intrudes upon my thoughts. 

"I need as much the cross I bear 
As air I breathe, as light I see ; 
It draws me to Thy side in prayer, 
It bends me to my strength in Thee." 

Thoughts are the little streams in my soul area that 

are easily turned into whatever direction wished, and 

they gather strength from continual repe- 

THOUGHTS titi()nj when they break forth j nto words 

or acts or both. Two wishes make a will, and the will 
molds my being. To live most carefully is to live with 
a consciousness of all my thought streams being be- 
neath the eye of God, for He is always in sight and 
hears what I think ere it throbs into being. Let God 
speak to my heart and search me. To myself I ask — 

"You are pure, you say ; are your thoughts as white 
As the snow that falls with the midnight's hush? 
Could you see them blazoned in letters of light, 
For the world to read, and feel no blush ? 

"If you stood in the court of heaven, 'mid swift, 

Glad greetings of loved ones who know no wrong, 
Could you bare your heart to them all, and lift 
Unshrinking eyes to that spotless throng?" 

My heart is always uncovered before Him, day and 
night, and my thinking creates the embryo of my 



THOUGHTS 19 

actions, so that to think improperly closely approaches 
the improper act — both are actions according to the 
teachings of Jesus, but one is inward and the other is 
outward. The first is known perhaps only to God and 
me, while the other is known to many. 

The wildest chamber that I ever sat in is that of my 
mind, with its roving thoughts — trifling, useless, un- 
kind and unholy. They sometimes rush upon me when 
I begin to read the Scriptures, and they try to beat me 
away from the mercy-seat in my prayers; at other 
times they bring up my past sins and intimate that God 
has not forgiven them ; and then they insidiously ques- 
tion my friendship with God. I have foolishly too 
frequently yielded to these evil influences, for I know 
that their presence is ruin to my soul, but / am imper- 
fect, and so I shall not be discouraged. I shall keep 
at my task of trying until good thoughts shall continu- 
ally linger about me as angels of mercy and their bene- 
dictions shall fill my mental visions. 

'True dignity abides with him alone 
Who, in the patient hour of silent thought, 
Can still respect and still revere himself." 

The most dangerous instrument in me is my tongue. 

The only sin for which there is no pardon is a sin of 

the tongue. James said that it is "a restless 

talking evil; if is j uU Q f deadl p i son » Deeper 

wounds are made by it than by any instrument of steel ; 
its rebukes smart more upon the soul than a blow upon 
the cheek, but it is an instrument as none other for 
blessing and for sending joy into the lives of those 
around me. It is always wise to keep a watch at the 
door of my lips, for Jesus taught that I shall have to 
give an account of all my injurious words in the day of 
judgment. 

"If I am tempted to reveal 

A tale someone to me has told 
About another, let it pass, 
Before I speak, three gates of gold. 



20 GOD AND ME 

"Three narrow gates: First, 'Is it true?' 
Then, 'Is it needful?' In my mind 
Give truthful answer, and the next 
I Is last and narrowest, 'Is it kind?' 

1 " "And if, to reach my lips at last, 

It passes through these gateways three, 
Then I may tell the tale, nor fear 
What the result of speech may be." 

When I am wronged my tongue is the instrument 
by which I express resentment, but the principles of the 
religion of Jesus teach that vengeance does not belong 
to me. Believing in Him, it is my privilege to suffer, 
to be misunderstood, to pray for my enemies, to bear 
th* Cross, in order that I may be made like God, but it 
is .ot mine to administer vengeance to one who has 
wronged me. That belongs to God, and when I 
attempt to do that which belongs to Him, not only I 
forget that He is by my side, but my act is discourtesy 
to Him. I can talk it over with another ; I can explain 
and myself ask for an explanation; I can ask pardon 
and myself try to show my brother his fault ; I can for- 
bid further encroachments, but in all this I must try to 
recognize that God is present and that I too am fre- 
quently saying things that I ought not to — therefore 
I must pity. 

What has been said to me or about me may be true, 
then I should profit by it ; or it may be false, which is 
easier to bear, for, as say the Scriptures, "it is better, 
if the will of God should so will, that ye should suffer for 
well-doing than for evil-doing" but whether it be true 
or false, it is philosophically true that, if I speak kindly 
of one it will strengthen my love for that person, but 
if I speak unkindly, either to his face or behind his back, 
it will contribute to my dislike of him, and if repeatedly 
done my dislike zvill grow into hatred. My aim then 
must be to speak kindly in order that I may be properly 
remade, for (C love taketh not account of evil." 

It is easy to abuse another, but it is cowardly and un- 
kind; it is always manly to exhibit the principles of 



TALKING 21 

Jesus in the face of wrong. "A soft answer turneth 
away wrath/ 3 and the only cure for evil is to show 
forth goodness, however hard and costly it may be. 

If the person who did me wrong did it intentionally 
it is that much sadder and, therefore, it is to be much 
more pitied. Human life is the most pathetic scene in 
the world — just a human being, whether he be rich or 
poor, learned or ignorant, cheerful or sorrowful, good 
or bad — there is pathos, with its ancestry, its environ- 
ments, its wreck, its struggles, its hopes, its failures, 
and on its inner cheek hangs a tear of grief. I am an 
object of pity in the sight of God, and to me all others 
are pictures in pathos, and the very scene calls for the 
bridling of my tongue that no harsh word sh, aid 
wound my brother man, whose soul, like mine, is al- 
ready disfigured by sin ; but, if I fail in all this, and I 
have failed often, as when a school boy I failed fre- 
quently in my arithmetic, geography and grammar, / 
will not be discouraged, but I will continue to try, for 
there is a friendship between God and me, and one of 
the chief principles in this friendship is, "I can do all 
things in Him that strengthened me!' 

It has been intimated that the average person con- 
sumes about five hours a day in conversation, covering 
about 15 octavo pages an hour, the space covered by the 
ordinary public speaker, from which it is concluded 
that the average person makes a weekly volume of 525 
pages and, covering 70 years, the conversation of one 
person would make a library of 3640 octavo volumes. 
What an immense individual library ! What is it 
worth? In committing sins, if I have tried again, if I 
have left on those pages thoughts of God, forgiveness, 
longsuffering, kindness, meekness, be my life ever so 
obscure and insignificant, I shall have made a library 
grander than the Congressional in Washington, or the 
British Museum in London, or the National in Paris, 
or the Imperial in St. Petersburg, or the Royal in 
Berlin. 



22 GOD AND ME 

The mysteries of temptation are sometimes baffling, 
but every one who enters into the league of friendship 
with God must meet them. Jesus went 
temptation i mme diately from His baptism into the 
conflict, and His victory over Satan then not only in- 
sured His victory on the Cross and out of the tomb, but 
likewise insured His victory for me in my conflict, for 
God is always with me, and He is stronger than Satan. 

I cannot make so perfect a fight as Jesus made — I 
have failed often and I may fail a thousand times, but 
as long as I am sincerely ashamed of my failures and 
heroically try to overcome, I am on the pilgrim's road. 
A passage of Scripture, a prayer or a hymn will some- 
times disarm the tempter; at other times it helps to 
speak directly to myself as though I were another, or 
the taking of a friend into my confidence may help — 
two of us praying together, for men must anchor each 
other — but whatever be the circumstances, / must not 
forget that God is with me, and my energies must be 
directed in throwing up the dikes of resistance, for my 
spiritual adversary is seeking my destruction. 

Temptation is twofold in that it has within it both 
Satan's alluring into sin and God's proving of char- 
acter. Satan is fighting for my soul, and he is skilled in 
intrigue. He uses my friends, my enemies and all 
kinds of circumstances to approach under cover any 
one or all of my weaknesses, not with great sins at first, 
but through avenues of the smallest sins, and gradually 
leads on the attack until I lie a conquered soul at his 
feet; but his conquest of me is not permanent, for by 
God's grace I possess the strength for freedom, and I 
will again claim friendship with God. 

All inclinations, desires and propositions to sin come 
from Satan, who endeavors by afflictions, disappoint- 
ments, worldly successes, evil thoughts and persecu- 
tions to draw me into saying or doing something that 
shall reflect on the friendship between God and me. 
"Let no man say when he is tempted, I am tempted of 



TEMPTATION 23 

God, for God cannot be tempted with evil, and He Him- 
self tempteth no man, but each man is tempted when he 
is drawn away by his own lust and enticed" ; neither 
can any man say that God gave to mankind these things, 
and with them, desires and appetites for evil and, there- 
fore, gratification is no sin; but in the midst of these 
conditions God calls upon me to glorify Him in both my 
body and my soul by practicing the principles of god- 
liness. "It is the devil's part to suggest," said Bernard, 
"it is ours not to consent ; as often as we overcome him, 
so we bring glory to God, who opposeth us that we may 
contend and assisteth us that we may conquer." It is 
a real battle, where thoughts and motives are the arma- 
ments, and where consequences in me alone are more 
vital and far-reaching than those in the battle of 
Marathon, or Arbela, or Tours, or Blenheim, or Sara- 
toga, or Waterloo. 

I am not surprised at the extent of sin in the world, 
neither will I be discouraged if there is more, for the 
capacity for man to sin is tremendous, and the mighty 
depths in my own nature for evil astonish me. God is 
holding me and others in check, and He is proving His 
love and power in the salvation of a sinner like me. 

Temptation is the furnace-house of the soul, and in 
it God proves character, which is made by experience. 
There is both strength and sense within me to meet my 
temptations, for He has assured me that there is no 
temptation beyond my ability to bear, and that in every 
temptation there is an open door for my escape. Both 
Abraham and Job were proved, and succeeding ages 
have seen the excellency of their characters, because of 
their trials. God proves me before He takes me into 
heaven — not in order to know me any more than the 
miner proves the gold ore to find out if there is any 
gold in it. The miner knows that gold is in the ore and, 
therefore, he proves it by casting the ore into the smelter 
and thereby separating the gold from the ore. "If 
need be," said the apostle, "ye have been put to grief in 



24 GOD AND ME 

manifold trials, that the proof of your faith, being more 
precious than gold that perisheth though it is proved by 
fire, may be found unto praise and glory and honor at 
the revelation of Jesus Christ." 

"Let thy gold be cast in the furnace, 

Thy red gold, precious and bright; 
Do not fear the hungry fire, 

With its caverns of burning light, 
And thy gold shall return more precious, 

Free from every spot and stain; 
For gold must be tried by fire, 

And a heart must be tried by pain. 

"In the cruel fire of sorrow 

Cast thy heart ; do not faint or wail ; 
Let thy heart be firm and steady, 

Do not let thy spirit quail, 
But wait till the trial is over, 

And take thy heart again, 
For as gold is tried by fire, 

So a heart must be tried by pain. 

"I shall know by the gleam and glitter 

Of the golden chain you wear; 
By your heart's calm strength in loving, 

Of the fire it has had to bear. 
Beat on, true heart, forever, 

Shine bright, strong, golden chain; 
And bless the cleansing fire, 

And the furnace of living pain." 

This is as truly the way to the education of the heart 
as language and literature are for the education of the 
brain. These things are essential to the building of 
character, for which purpose I came into this friendship 
with God, and so I must seek with all my might to en- 
dure. While every victory makes me stronger for the 
next conflict, the approaches of temptation will never 
cease in my life, and sometimes they may be stronger 
than in previous years. A few hours before John Knox 
died he awoke from his sleep sighing, and he said, "I 
have formerly, during my frail life, sustained my con- 
tests and many assaults of Satan, but at present the 
roaring lion has assailed me most furiously and put 
forth all his strength to devour and make an end of me 
at once. . . . The cunning serpent has labored 



TEMPTATION 25 

to persuade me that I have merited heaven and eternal 
blessedness by the faithful discharge of my ministry; 
but blessed be God, who has enabled me to beat down 
and quench this fiery dart !" 

The Scriptures have named temptation as an occasion 
for gladness : "Count it all joy, my brethren, when ye 
fall into manifold temptations" knowing that the prov- 
ing of your faith worketh patience." In my prayer I 
ask for patience and, out of the trial, God gives me that 
rare grace, and He wreathes this nimbus upon the head 
of the victor, which I take to myself : "Blessed is the 
man that endureth temptation, for when he hath been 
approved, he shall receive the crown of life, which the 
Lord promised to them that love Him." 

There is much around me that is innocent, beautiful 

and good, and God has taught me that my body is the 

temple of the Holy Spirit, and so I must 

AMUSEMENTS ^ careful where j take ft an( j into what 

it shares. If I desire the recreation of out-door sports 
and innocent parlor games, there is abundant opportu- 
nity without the suspicion of evil, but the choice of my 
amusement must be like the choice of my food. What- 
ever injures my body and causes me trouble, I am care- 
ful to avoid, and so whatever interferes with my spirit- 
ual life and weakens my friendship for God, I must 
quit. In doing this I may have to give up friends 
and some amusements that I like, but whether that be 
hard or not, it does not matter, for my friendship with 
God is the most precious thing in the world, and in His 
sight it must not have upon it any suspicion. 

Some persons tell me that the theater, dancing, card- 
playing and social drinking are no injuries to them. 
They are to me, however, and so I must have no part 
in such amusements. I recognize that each of these 
has phases that are almost free from criticism, other 
than they have always had the appearance of evil, but 
in the culmination of the patronage of them, they have 



26 GOD AND ME 

been the rocks upon which tens of thousands have gone 
to their spiritual death, with not the record of so much 
as one finding birth into spiritual life thereby. 

The theater was born 2500 years ago in the lap of 
evil. yEschylus and other ancients tried to make it an 
institution for morality, but failed. Plato, Aristotle 
and Tacitus denounced it as demoralizing in its effects 
upon the people. Booth, Irving and Garrick of modern 
times sought earnestly to elevate it, but those theaters 
which they conducted for moral plays only, soon went 
into bankruptcy. Johnson and Macaulay were bold in 
deploring the results of the patronage of the playhouse. 
The celebrated actor Macready never allowed his 
daughter to attend the theater, and, when Mary Ander- 
son left the stage, she forbade her children's attending 
any kind of plays. While there are some moral plays, 
the great mass of plays are opposed to the principles of 
God, and I am sure that He would not want me counted 
among those who are the supporters of an institution 
that is unfriendly to Him and His cause. 

It is likewise so with dancing, which breaks down 
those God-established barriers that should ever exist 
between the sexes, and permits liberties to be taken that 
would not be tolerated elsewhere; it is so with cards, 
which bear the stamp of the gamblers' fingers, and it is 
so with social drinking, whose road lies over broken 
homes and broken hearts as perhaps no other pathway 
in the whole world. All of these things are opposed to 
the league of friendship between God and me, and I am 
under obligations to help to weaken them, rather than 
to help to strengthen them. 

Paul said that if the eating of meat, which we think so 
necessary, but which he feared might sometimes have 
been meat that had been offered to idols, and thereby 
cause some weak believer to go back into idolatry, was 
inexpedient, he would never eat any more meat. I am 
to some extent the keeper of all with whom I come in 
contact. Besides, the atmosphere of these things has 



AMUSEMENTS 27 

always been hurtful to spiritual growth. One of God's 
earliest principles was that to live in pleasure is spiritual 
death — not likely to be, but dead already. My friend- 
ship with God means a serious life; / cannot be con- 
formed to this world; I will not be; I must be con- 
formed by His remaking of me, brought about by the 
closeness of my friendship with Him. 

Friendship is one of the most beautiful conditions in 
human society. It grows slowly, but when grow r n it 
stands ten thousand jars. Real friends 
companions are rare? and stin rarer is a broken friend- 
ship. To this delightful condition companionship 
sometimes leads, and so it is of pre-eminent importance 
whom I make my companions, for I will be influenced 
by them for good or bad. The influence of a good 
person is God's greatest power on earth, but an evil 
companion is Satan's agent, and he will steal away my 
friendship from God. As disease is more contagious 
than health, / will unconsciously partake of my com- 
panion's weaknesses rather than his excellencies, so I 
had better have no companions at all rather than have 
pulled down what God is building up within me, for 
the friendship between God and me has precedence 
over every other condition in life, and he who weakens 
that, however much he loves me, is my enemy. 

I may have acquaintances, but I cannot afford to 
have among my companions swearers, moderate drink- 
ers, gossipers, trifling and vulgar talkers, lovers of 
amusements more than lovers of worship, irreverent 
story tellers, especially making sport of Bible charac- 
ters and incidents ; among them may be persons whom 
I love, perhaps church members, but I am not strong 
enough to have them as my companions, however much 
I wish to have them. Their conversations and habits 
leave lasting effects upon me and will eventually 
weaken my friendship for God. To wilfully associate 
with such persons is like taking up my dwelling in a 
district infected with disease. I can go among them to 



28 GOD AND ME 

help to get them away from their habits; this I must 
do, for I am here to help God make better all those 
within my reach, so that I cannot live to myself, and 
my life is best spent when I am helping others. 

Si <£ 

Next to living persons, good books are my best 
friends. I love them as though they were persons — my 
love reaches to the personality back of the 
books pj-in^ed page. They speak to me out of mutual 
friendship. Farrar said, "Who can say 'I have no com- 
panions V Why, if you will, the noblest of all societies 
will welcome you. Kings will utter to you their best 
thoughts, and saints sit beside you, like brothers ! Is it 
nothing that at the turning of a page you may find the 
best and greatest of men eager to talk to you . . . 
orators ready to pour forth for you their most splendid 
periods, poets with their garlands and singing robes 
about them? These noblest companions, these mighty 
spirits will have none of the malice or arrogance or 
weakness of the living. We may realize from these 
that the communion of saints is a communion not only 
with the living, but with the mightier and more unnum- 
bered dead." 

The news stands are crowded with newspapers, mag- 
azines and books in fiction ; it is the food of the multi- 
tude, but only a very moderate part of these must come 
to me. Much of this reading weakens the mind more 
than doing nothing and will produce mental impotency. 
My books reflect my inner self as the food on my 
table shows the taste of my palate. If I can afford to 
buy furniture for my room or clothes for my body, / 
can afford to buy good books for the furnishing of my 
mental apartments, which shall still bear its decorations 
after this earthly tabernacle has crumbled. A half a 
dozen good books is a start. "I had rather be a poor 
man in a garret with plenty of books," said Macaulay, 
"than a king who did not love reading." A weekly 



BOOKS 29 

religious paper indicates my interest in the advance- 
ment of God's Kingdom, and I think He must be 
pleased when He and I watch together the records in 
the annals of His saints. 

A few well-chosen books — in history, poetry and 
religion — furnish the basis for a good library, and 
books of travel, fiction, science and kindred branches 
may be added later. Slow reading and digesting is 
better than multifarious reading. I will not be ashamed 
if I have not read a new book, however popular it may 
be. I must discriminate in what I read, as in what I 
eat ; but though my choice may be largely for religious 
books, even these must be read with care, for if they 
take away my taste for reading the Bible they do me 
harm ; or if my love for them makes the Bible second- 
ary, they are injurious. The Bible is the book for my 
constant reading. Ruskin said, "I consider memoriz- 
ing much of the Bible the most precious and, on the 
whole, the one essential part of my education. " And 
spiritually, its reading is absolutely essential to my soul. 
It must be the center, and all my reading should lead 
up to it. 

All work is religious, be it selling goods over the 

counter, writing an essay, making a fire, putting up a 

fence, building a house, sweeping the 

daily rounds floot ^ collecting a billj experimenting 

in the laboratory, lecturing on science, preparing a 
meal or holding conversation with another ; God is not 
only the witness to all of these transactions, but Him- 
self is a part of them, and out of them come lessons in 
patience, honesty, fidelity, perseverance, contentment, 
equity, justice, gentleness, meekness, reverence, humil- 
ity, longsuffering, self-control and holiness. These 
are the qualities that make me like the ideal model, and 
all places are altars for my worship to God. 



30 GOD AND ME 

"Every mason in the quarry, every builder on the shore, 
Every woodman in the forest, every boatman at the oar, 
Hewing wood and drawing water, splitting stones and clear- 
ing sod, 
All the dusty ranks of labor in the regiment of God, 
March together toward His temple, do the task his hands pre- 
pare; 
Honest toil is holy service, faithful work is praise and prayer." 

Reading of the Scriptures and prayer are the confi- 
dential talks that He and I have on the way, but the 
capstone of the week is my worship with others on the 
Lord's Day. God expects this of me, and visitors com- 
ing in or invitations to visit others at the hour of wor- 
ship are an insult to my friendship with God. I must 
be among my brethren to be blessed, else God will 
miss me. 

The daily round in my life is my workshop, where 
God and I are making my character. Nothing need be 
so violent as to break communion with Him, and if in 
my weakness communion is broken, I must greet Him 
on my first thought of Him, for He has not left me 
alone, but He was by my side when I was vexed by 
provocation, stung by disappointment, burdened with 
care and humiliated by unkindness. 
"If I could only surely know 
That all these things that tire me so 

Were noticed by my Lord ! 
The pang that cuts me like a knife, 
The noise, the weariness, the strife — 
What peace it would afford! 

"I wonder if He really shares 
In all these little human cares, 

This mighty King of kings ! 
If He who guides through boundless space 
Each blazing planet in its place 
Can have the condescending grace 

To mind these petty things. 

"It seems to me, if sure of this, 
Blent with each ill would come such bliss 

That I might covet pain, 
And deem whatever brought to me 
The loving thought of Deity, 
And sense of Christ's sweet sympathy, 

Not loss, but richest gain. 



DAILY ROUNDS 31 

"Dear Lord, my heart shall no more doubt 
That Thou dost compass me about 

With sympathy divine ; 
The love for me once crucified 
Is not the love to leave my side, 
But waiteth ever to divide 

Each smallest care of mine." 

When things do not go as I want them, and I have 
used my best judgment and put into them all my ener- 
gies, I must remember that my judgment is not infal- 
lible, and perhaps God is directing otherwise the affairs 
that concern me ; but whether it be God's directing or 
Satan's it will eventually be for my good, for God is 
my friend, and He is able to overrule all things accord- 
ing to His will, and so I must try to practice content- 
ment. 

When my failures, disappointments and humiliations 
set me to worrying or murmuring, it is wrong, for the 
first indicates distrust, and the second indicates rebel- 
lion. One of God's chief principles is "Do all things 
without murmurings and questionings/' and by the 
side of this command He has left a lesson for me in the 
names Taberah, Kibroth-hattaavah, Paran and Zin — 
places where divine judgment came upon Israel to 
almost their destruction because of the sin of murmur- 
ing. I must do the thing that lies before me, and do it 
cheerfully and heartily. If it is an obscure service, that 
does not matter. God and I are together. I must seek 
to be contented. Today is my time. If it is not well 
used — and well used is to keep with God — it is time 
gone forever, and with it is gone the opportunity for 
peace and joy. 

My difficulty too frequently is that I think I do not 
need so much severe discipline as God is permitting to 
come to me, and this is such a sin that, if I rebel against 
God instead of my growth being towards contentment 
and trust, it will be towards sourness and doubt, which 
will ruin me, for "all growth that is not toward God is 
growing to decay" These daily rounds are greater 
issues in my life than I had thought. 



32 GOD AND ME 

Pride, discontent, covetousness, oversensitiveness, 
conceit, worldly ambitions, selfishness — these are op- 
posed to love — and to kill them in me it may have to 
be done by another wounding my feelings ; but I must 
not have resentment against the person, be he a friend 
or an enemy. I have nothing to do with his purposes 
or motives, but God will overrule my mortification for 
my good. My interest in the Kingdom of God must 
have precedence over my feelings. He said that I must 
seek that first. Deeper the humiliation, greater the 
opportunity for me to show forth kindness, longsuffer- 
ing and forgiveness, and thereby get closer to God. 

"Men may rise on stepping-stones 
Of their dead selves to higher things." 

Jesus was treated badly, and He foretold that like 
treatment would come to His friends, and so it must 
sometimes come to me, else it will appear as though 
God has broken friendship with me. When it does 
come I must not be ashamed to suffer any more than 
to be ashamed to repent when I have sinned. The 
thorns in my path are from the crown of thorns that 
pierced the head of Jesus, and thus all these things 
that hurt are sacred, and their scars should be the occa- 
sion for real joy rather than for the expression of 
unkind feelings. It will not be so at once, but by full 
submission to God I can make it so. 

I may have to struggle long and hard to keep down 
resentment against those who wrong me; resentment 
grows stronger if constantly used. I have sometimes 
failed in suppressing it, and I shall fail at it again, but I 
will persevere, for my remaking is the most important 
thing to me in the world, and it is most frequently by 
the way of mortification, hard knocks, unkindness and 
ingratitude. I must not lose courage. I must hold 
close to God. I must be kind and heroic. Others in 
God's friendship have overcome, and so can I. This is 
what the apostle meant when he said, "I beseech you 
by the mercies of God to present your bodies a living 



DAILY ROUNDS 33 

sacrifice." God has marked my humanity as sublimely 
precious, and therefore worthy of being made an offer- 
ing. It is with me whether the offering shall be partial 
or complete. The retaining of resentment, impurity, 
pride, oversensitiveness, covetousness and worldliness 
will make the offering partial, but Jesus made a com- 
plete offering for me. / must not be satisfied until 
every sin of mine and all things tliat hinder have been 
included in the offering. The friendship between God 
and me calls for this. I must practice at it through the 
years until self-control shall man my being, and out of 
the lesson learned I shall be glad of the vexations, 
rebukes and mortifications. 

"To what fit end this ceaseless round of toil, 
The fret and turmoil of the day, 
Hopes that elude, ideals that pass away, 

Rewards that with possession spoil ? 

Each morn the sun on some new hope doth rise ; 

Each eve some hope lies dead 'neath darkling skies. 

"Dost thou presume to know the ways of God, 
To justify the means His love employs? 
Art thou informed how worlds are held in poise ? 
The blade of grass, how springs it from the sod? 
If thou art blind to knozu how these things be, 
Wouldst thou essay to tell His way with thee?' 3 * 

From the earliest history of mankind it has been rec- 
ognized that God has had a part in all our possessions. 

The heathen practices this principle in lay- 
finances ing . his ff er i n g S at tne f eet of his gods ^f 

wood and stone. Abraham paid his tenth, and his prac- 
tice runs through the entire Old Testament, the He- 
brew's offering later being nearly two-tenths of his in- 
come. Upon the rise of Christianity the bringing of 
their offerings was one of the first fruits of the new 
life. Many of the early believers gave all into a com- 
mon treasury and lived on equal expense with one an- 
other. Barnabas sold his farm and laid the money at 
the apostles' feet. Paul declared that hilarious giving 
is the ideal practice. Out of these lessons of the past 



34 GOD AND ME 

and God's unspeakable love for me I must cheerfully 
show forth my friendship for God in the handling of 
money, be it little or much. Covetousness is sin, but 
giving is the spirit of God, and however much one may 
have, he is poor who does not give cheerfully and liber- 
ally to God. To withhold from God is termed rob- 
bery in the Scriptures, and on the practice of giving the 
tenth to God, it is affirmed by the prophet that the win- 
dows of heaven will be opened over me and He shall 
pour out such a blessing that there shall not be room 
enough to receive it. This is true in the experience of 
many present-day Christians — it must be so, for God's 
promises cannot be broken. 

Out of my daily, weekly, monthly or annual receipts 
the first to be taken is my offering, if possible, beginning 
with the tenth, and I must not be satisfied until it goes 
far beyond this, for I must grow in giving as in every 
other grace. This offering must be handled as system- 
atically and reverently as the Hebrews did their lambs 
for the sacrifice. The early Christians made their offer- 
ing on the Lord's Day, and I must do likewise, for their 
company is precious to me. All that I have belongs to 
God. I am only the trustee y and my offering is both a 
pledge of my trusteeship and a thankoffering for His 
goodness to me. "There is that scattereth, and in- 
creaseth yet more ; and there is that withholdeth more 
than is meet, but it tendeth only to want." 

With the balance of the money I am to pay all other 
obligations. I must pay as promptly as possible. To 
me a debt must never be out of date. I must be honest 
if I would keep the friendship of God. My cashbook is 
open to Him always, and all my accounts are audited by 
Him. The mishandling of my money — His money — 
indicates degeneration in me, and however difficult it 
may be, I must seek to be systematic and accurate in 
all money matters. Then out of my recognition of 
God's place in money affairs I have a new assurance of 
His love, for the Scriptures affirm that God loves a 
cheerful giver. 






TELLING THE STORY 35 

God is interested in me and He loves me, yet I know 

not why He should be any more interested in me and 

why He should love me any more 

telling the story than Qther mem b e rs of the human 

race, for we are all alike, and I am no better than any. 
He loves others as well as He loves me, and God and I 
are in league for the saving of others as He has saved 
me. 

Wherever there is a soul, be it in a casket of white, 
yellow or black, / am the debtor. I owe what God has 
given me to all mankind, and God needs me in the dis- 
tribution of His blessings, for this service has not been 
given to angels, but to men, and so a part has been 
given to me. Men must be the instruments to other 
men, or God's work is not done. 

In the beginning, the Son made things and the Spirit 
garnished creation; in these days of redemption, both 
the Son and the Spirit are doing their work — one laying 
the foundation and the other leading men over the road 
of Christ to the throne of the Father, but men are hon- 
ored in this service— redeemed men — men in friendship 
with God — in being permitted to be the message bear- 
ers of this golden tale of love. If I go into the pulpit 
or go to the heathen lands, that will be all right; but, 
if I do neither, I can still tell others of Him. I can talk 
to my companions, or maybe a stranger on the street, 
or by the roadside, in the office or the factory, at the 
church door or by the fireside. Tell it, tell it, is the 
commission ; speak it by word, or write a letter, and the 
more I tell it the stronger God is on the earth. 

God needs me to help Him save the world, and my 
lack of interest in another s salvation indicates my de- 
parting love for God. Indifference is sin. If I refuse 
to let Him use me I stop the streams of His mercy flow- 
ing through me, just as I dam a stream of water flow- 
ing through a field. The water will find its way around 
the dam and go through some other depression onward 
to the sea, and God will use another to do what He has 



36 GOD AND ME 

lovingly designed that I should do. I may fail in try- 
ing to do His will — doing it so poorly and imperfectly 
that out of mortification I shall hesitate to try again, but 
I must be willing to try for His sake. He loves me; 
He loves others, and He asks the privilege to use my 
lips to speak to my fallen brother as He used another to 
speak to me when I lay fallen. His friendship is too 
dear; I must not fail Him, and so my stammering, 
blundering attempt to tell another is laid at His service, 
for He and I are friends. 

Jesus died for the whole world — all races and nations 
— and without belief in Him there can be no salvation. 
I have already been assured through His 
missions wor( j t^ belief comes by hearing, and so I 
must try to make the message heard among all nations. 
It is not a matter of choice ; it is a necessity, for on my 
becoming a believer in Him and enlisting in the league 
of His friendship, I am under obligations to be inter- 
ested in missionary work among all nations. If I am 
not interested, I must seek to be, for the lack of inter- 
est not only betrays my lack of knowledge of His plan 
of salvation, but my lack of love as well for both Him 
and those for whom He died, thereby affecting most 
seriously the status of my friendship with God. 

If I am indifferent to missionary work among all na- 
tions, I am indifferent to that which is dearest to the 
heart of God. This is the chief theme of the Scriptures. 
It was the last command of Jesus before His ascension. 
If the missionary passages were to be cut out of the 
New Testament, it would bleed to death, for it is a mis- 
sionary volume from beginning to end. It cannot be 
understood aside from this viewpoint. According to 
the words of my Lord, the condition of His abiding 
presence — unbroken and always with me — rests upon 
the degree of my interest in missions. 

I myself am the product of missionary work, for had 
not some one come years ago to my ancestors to tell 



MISSIONS 37 

them of Jesus, I should today be in that condition 
of Paganism that covers the interior of China and 
Thibet. For what it has done for me, if there were no 
other reasons, I should want all mankind to share not 
only my civilization, but my pardon of sin and my hope 
of heaven. Otherwise I should be selfish, and selfishness 
mars the friendship between God and me, so every con- 
sideration contributes to make the cause of missions 
dear to my heart. It is the channel through which flows 
the life of God to the dying world. I can only be a little 
channel, but I am blessed in the consciousness that I 
have begun to be, and by His grace I ever shall be, such 
a channel. I shall some day meet these streams of 
mercy that are flowing through many lives, some little, 
like mine, and others larger, into that universal ocean of 
His redeeming love, that shall cover the earth as the 
waters cover the deep. 

As deep as the mystery of love is the mystery of 
sorrow. I can understand something of the philosophy 
of the mind, but who understands the phi- 
sorrow Josophy of pain ? Jesus on the Cross said to 
the Father, "Why hast Thou forsaken me?" and out of 
my own sorrow I am constantly asking the question, 
"Why do I suffer so muchf" It is the most common 
interrogation that falls from human lips. 

Sorrow is the greatest schoolroom on the earth. The 
Scriptures tell me that Jesus was made perfect through 
suffering, and I am in His school, and those without 
sorrow are the untaught. God at no time is so near me 
as when I am in pain. It is the path that has been 
trodden by the best of the earth. The prophets and 
apostles, the martyrs and a great company of saints are 
with me, and among us walks my Friend, who is called 
"the Man of Sorrows." Isaiah said that in all our 
afflictions He is afflicted. He suffers when I suffer. 
The wreck of this race has been the most costly thing 
in the universe, but God is remaking me out of the 
wreck. 



38 GOD AND ME 

"They tell me I must bruise 
The rose's leaf 
Ere I can keep and use 
Its fragrance brief. 

"They tell me I must break 

The skylark's heart 
Ere her cage song will make 
The silence start. 

"They tell me love must bleed, 

And friendship zveep, 
Ere in my deepest need 
I touch that deep. 

"Must it be always so 
With precious things ? 
Must they be bruised, and go 
With beaten wings ? 

"Ah, yes ! By crushing days, 
By caging nights, by scar 
Of thorns and stony ways, 
These blessings are." 

Of all discipline sorrow is the noblest. While I 
shrink from it, it is the thing that gives muscle to my 
faith, teaching me the art of wrestling with God, and 
it is the one thing that gives vision to my soul, bringing 
the whole world, and heaven, too, in a hand's touch. 
All moments become secret miracles and inexpressible 
experiences come to my soul. By the same strange law 
that scourged Jesus I, too, must be scourged, for the 
Scriptures affirm that / cannot be received without 
chastisement y out of which is produced the fruit of 
righteousness. 

"There was a scar on yonder mountain-side, 

Gashed out where once the cruel storm had trod; 
A barren, desolate chasm, reaching wide 
Across the soft green sod. 

"But years crept by beneath the purple pines, 

And veiled the scar with grass and moss once more, 
And left it fairer now with flowers and vines 
Than it had been before. 

"There was a wound once in a gentle heart, 

Whence all life's sweetness seemed to ebb and die ; 
And love's confiding changed to bitter smart, 
While slow, sad years went by. 



SORROW 39 

"Yet as they passed, unseen an angel stole, 
And laid a balm of healing on the pain, 
Till love grew purer in the heart made whole, 
And peace came back again." 

Lively company, worldly pleasures and mirth cannot 
heal the stripes of the scourge. As the communicating 
of a joy increases the joy, the communicating of a sor- 
row lightens its burden ; but neither this world's prac- 
tices nor good friends can do in these great moments 
of sorrow. The balm must come from above. 

"How does God send the Comforter? 

Ofttimes through byways dim, 
Not always by the beaten path 

Of sacrament and hymn; 
Not always through the gates of prayer, 

Or penitential psalm, 
Or sacred rite, or holy day, 

Or incense, breathing balm. 

"How does God send the Comforter? 

Perchance through faith intense; 
Perchance through humblest avenues 

Of sight, or sound, or sense. 
Haply in childhood's laughing voice 

Shall breathe the voice divine, 
And tender hands of earthly love 

Pour for thee heavenly wine ! 

"How will God send the Comforter? 

Thou knowest not, nor I ! 
His ways are countless as the stars 

His hand hath hung on high. 
His roses bring their fragrant balm, 

His twilight hush its peace, 
Morning its splendour, night its calm, 

To give thy pain surcease !" 

There can be no true friendship between God and 
me except there is included another — some acquaint- 
ance or friend or stranger or enemy — any- 

ANOTHFR • 

body, but certainly somebody, who needs to 
be helped, and I must be the helper. Whatever I may 
have accumulated in grace or self-control or patience 



40 GOD AND ME 

or knowledge or money or influence, all these are for 
the use of others, and to use them alone for my own 
pleasure is personal ruin to myself and an injury both 
to God and to those around me. 

"For I, a man, with men am linked 
And not a brute with brutes ; no gain 
That I experience must remain 
Unshared" 

All the world needs help ; I need it from another and 
another needs it from me. No one can live alone. I 
live at my best when I am living for others. God sends 
the troubled to me; I in turn am sent to them, and 
there is no such letter of introduction as human grief. 
At once we are on common ground. The appeal of the 
world's poverty-stricken masses must lower my ear to 
the tale of their burdens, must check my extravagance 
and must set me practicing economy, not alone for my 
own good, but for the good of others as well, for the 
peril of my brothers involves me. I cannot say to them, 
"You have brought this condition upon yourselves and 
therefore suffer/' and then, withholding my help, turn 
away to drown the memory in the pleasures of plenty. 
The condition exists and God is here. 

"And when I sit at the banquet 

When the feast and the song are high, 
Amid the mirth and the music 
I can hear that awful cry. 

"And hollow and haggard eyes 
Look into the lighted hall ; 
And wasted hands are extended 
To catch the crumbs that fall. 

"For within there is light and plenty, 

And odours fill the air ; 
And without there is cold and darkness 
And hunger and despair." 

But money is the least of all help, for the ear of man- 
kind is more hungry for sympathy than the mouth for 
bread. Another wants to feel that / am his brother, 



ANOTHER 41 

and then he can bear the burden. It is left to me to 
satisfy the hunger of his heart. 

Many of the heaviest burdens in life are in homes 
where there is plenty and the lack of love has dried up 
all the cords and there is a constant aching as though 
the heart were alone made for pain. Others are stand- 
ing amid sudden calamities as though smitten by a 
scourge, and I am needed in order that I may keep my 
face in the shadow of another's grief, to stand firmly 
by one's side while the very foundations are being 
swept from under stumbling feet, to make my heart a 
poultice for the broken-hearted and my shoulder a 
crutch to the fallen. To do this cheerfully deepens the 
intimacy of the friendship between God and me. To 
take another's burden lessens my own and puts me in 
the royal service of fulfilling the law of Christ. 

Around me are the discouraged, the defeated and 
the dejected, and God has set me here to help. My 
task is more vital than those at the life-saving stations, 
who go out amid the breakers to rescue the drowning, 
and God has so made my heart that in matters of sym- 
pathy it rightly knows no economy. Not to sympathize 
is failure; to be a spendthrift in love is right. I must 
fully give myself until all is gone, and love will refill 
the vessel to be emptied into another's bosom. Because 
one is ungrateful, another is dissipated and others are 
indolent, I must not stop ; I might be as they are were I 
like them, and I would not want to be forsaken; but 
these hindrances must make me heroically practice the 
gospel of help, for not to be sympathetic to the extent 
of giving myself to another is heresy of the worst type. 
Then I am really bad, and I have foolishly cut off the 
draft to the soul fire, for my being is designed to bear 
God to the unloved, the unlovable, the tempted, the 
troubled and to all mankind — my kin — to pour out love 
like the sun pours out light and to bring the warm 
April breezes for the roots of dead flowers ; this is my 
debt to another. 



42 GOD AND ME 

Out of God's forgiveness of me, a sinner, who have 
done violence to all His goodness and love, I must for- 
give everyone, irrespective of what has 
forgiveness been done tQ me> Harsh words> ill- 
treatment, false accusations, impugning of motives, 
taking one's property by fraud — these things are hard 
to bear, but I will boldly ask for such divine grace as 
shall enable me to heartily practice forgiveness, for it 
is one of the fundamental principles in the friendship 
between God and me. There is no alternative — / must. 

It is sometimes hard to do — harder for my heart 
than any problem in geometry is for my mind — but by 
certain laws I mastered the problem in mathematics, 
although while working at it I failed often. It is so in 
practicing forgiveness. I have sometimes failed, but 
I will not be discouraged. It is weak and mean not to 
forgive. I will hush the murmurs of resentment in my 
bosom. I will practice nobility of soul until generosity 
to others shall be my normal condition. God gives me 
the power, and I am a weakling not to use it. / can 
forgive, and I will. 

I must not abuse one who has wronged me and then 
forgive him ; that is cowardice, and I need myself then 
to ask his pardon. If I am wronged and one asks my 
pardon, I must bury the transgression as God has 
buried mine ; that means that I must try never to men- 
tion it again directly or indirectly, for if I do otherwise 
I am asking God to uncover some of my old sins 
against Him. If one who has wronged me does not 
ask my pardon, I still have no right to keep unforgive- 
ness in my heart. There is no sense in irritating a sore. 
It must be healed if there would be health. I must try 
not to mention the wrong, for repetition of it strength- 
ens resentment and harbors unforgiveness. If it is 
wise to mention it, I must find in it a place for mercy 
for the wrongdoer. This brings one of the greatest 
issues into my life ; not to forgive makes me unhappy ; 



FORGIVENESS 43 

forgiveness of another gives me peace and makes me 
kind. 

There is simply no limit to God's forgiveness. He 
and I are friends, and I must practice His principles. 
He has taught me that seventy times seven — four hun- 
dred and ninety — times is not too often for me to for- 
give the same person for the same wrong. He has 
done that with me and I must practice that with others. 
Not to speak to another because I have been wronged 
is unbrotherly and unmanly. To keep in my heart the 
rubbish of unforgiveness — storing away old grudges — 
is a filthy practice. I need a heart-cleaning day, for I 
must keep friendship with God. My heart must be His 
chamber — kept sweet and clean — where He can rest at 
ease. Unforgiving thoughts and words grieve His 
love, but suffering unjustly is suffering with Christ, 
and it is at once an opportunity for me to pass to the 
higher grade in His school of discipline. Unforgive- 
ness lowers my standard ; forgiveness exalts me. 



The end of my pilgrim road is called death — a word 
that sends a shudder through some ; but, since God and 

deat * are * n ^ ie ^ ea S ue * friendship, it is to me the 
hour of triumph. It matters not when or where 
the road terminates, God will be there, as He now is with 
me here, and he will make my exit out of this world 
more glorious than I have ever dreamed of ; for me, in 
common with all in the league of friendship, He has 
taken the sting out of death, whatever that may mean, 
and there will be no soul pain at that hour. I will not 
then be afraid, for there can be no danger, since God 
will be with me — He is so gentle and so strong — neither 
will that home of my soul be strange to me, for He has 
told me much about it in His word — as much as I can 
understand — and it is enough to know that it is God's 
home and mine, so that death will simply be my home- 
going. Out of the battle of temptation, weary with the 



44 GOD AND ME 

daily rounds of disappointment and heart aching with 
sorrow, who would not want to go home, where there 
will be absolute safety and peace and joy? It would be 
so if one was in a distant land, away from the earthly 
home of love and plenty, receiving ill treatment at the 
hands of enemies. That condition which makes the 
earthly home so sweet is a prophecy of the perfect home 
above. 

Death is only the separation of the soul and the body. 
The former will be borne in the company of angels and 
loved ones into the bosom of God, for their heavenly 
faces will be looking down upon my dying pillow, wait- 
ing, when at the last sigh, my soul, freed from this 
tenement of clay, shall greet them in perpetual joy. I 
may see them as others have done, and call some of 
them by name before I leave the flesh, but whether I 
do or not, they shall crowd about me, and I shall go 
with them, for I shall be willing "to be absent from the 
body and to be at home with the Lord." Out of the 
friendship will have come the complete cure of my 
soul — eternal health, perfected soul ! Friends in the 
flesh standing about my dying bed shall say, "He is 
dead," but the angels and loved ones gone before shall 
shout throughout heaven, "He is alive forevermore. ,, 

My body — this temple of the Holy Spirit — shall be 
put into the grave to await its cure. Angels shall guard 
it, whether it be in a neglected country graveyard or a 
well-kept city cemetery, until the morning of the resur- 
rection, when the trumpet shall sound and my body shall 
be changed — the physical shall have become spiritual 
and this corruptible flesh shall have put on the incor- 
ruptible form — eternal health, perfected body — body 
and soul reunited in eternal felicity — at last glorified 
humanity like Jesus ! 

Death was once my enemy, but like all the other evil 
that God has overruled for my good, even death will 
be made my friend — no longer the jailer of the grave 



DEATH 45 

and the unknown, but to me, by the friendship of God, 
death will become the doorkeeper of heaven. It will be 
dying out of a world of sin, heartaches and sorrow — 
many have prayed for the exit. Paul said, "I have a 
desire to depart and to be with Christ, for it is very far 
better." It will be being born into a world of love, 
peace and joy — many have had their countenances illu- 
minated by this expectation. To me death will be the 
flower bursting the calyx — all heaven in blossoms with- 
out the touch of frost. It will only be a period in my 
life, which began when God and I became friends. 
Death will take me out of the company of enemies into 
the company of friends, out of the prison into the 
palace, and out of the storm into the haven of rest. It 
will be the end of school, and there will be no more 
practicing. Tired and toiling, I shall be glad to go 
home; the exile will become a citizen, the captive will 
become a freeman. Death does not argue displeasure, 
for the first man to die was Abel, who was innocent 
and righteous, and Jesus died in early manhood. 

Nothing in all my earthly vision is so beautiful as 
the close of the day — or must I say, that tint of the 
morning light ? In the autumn the leaves of the forest 
are painted with the glory of death in shades of gold 
and crimson, and a gentle breeze lowers them to their 
grave. It is the time of ripeness, and all my experi- 
ences of trials, service, disappointments, successes, sor- 
rows and joys tend to ripen me for God's autumnal 
harvest. Green fruit falls heavily, but when ripe it 
drops easily. All things that ripen are commentaries 
on death, and God will make my going as easy as the 
tides go out or the sun goes down. 

"I cannot see the distant shady trail 

That winds among the gnarled oaks and ferns ; 
And yet I know that, on beyond the blue, 
For me a quenchless love -light burns. 



46 GOD AND ME 

"And so I climb and feast among the flowers, 

And at the midnoon dream beneath the pine; 
While, at the flaming sundown red, I sip 
My own eve star's ambrosial wine. 

"And when at last I mount the far-off crag, 
/ know that, on the happy, wind-blown crest, 
The wished-for hand shall flash the long-sought light, 
And in the splendour / shall rest/' 

Nineveh and Babylon fell into ruins and are covered 
beneath sand drifts, Pompeii and Herculaneum were 
buried beneath the ashes and lava of Mount 
heaven y esuv j us ^ Lisbon and San Francisco were 
shaken into ruins by an earthquake, but God is the 
architect and maker of a city that hath foundations that 
can never be destroyed. Geographically, I do not know 
its location, but the Scriptures tell me that I am so close 
to it now that only a veil — that thinnest of fabrics, 
which moves at the touch of the wind — separates it 
from me. 

"I know not where His islands lift, 

Of marvel or surprise, 
Assured alone that life and death 

His mercy underlies. 
And so beside the silent sea 

I wait the muffled oar ; 
No harm from Him can come to me 

On ocean or on shore. 

"I know not where His islands lift 

Their fronded palms in air ; 
/ only know I cannot drift 

Beyond His love and care. 
And thou, O Lord, by whom are seen 

Thy creatures as they be, 
Forgive me if too close I lean 

My human heart on Thee." 

Jesus said that He was going there to prepare a place 
for me and would return here for me, and Jesus never 
forgets. John, looking through his apocalyptic lens, 
said it is a place where there are no death, no tears, 



HEAVEN 47 

no mourning, no pain, no curse, no night, and the 
throne of God is there. It is a commonwealth of 
priests and princes — my unworthy self to wear a 
crown — where reigns an exalted fellowship with the 
most gifted spirits of the earth, whose lamps were 
lighted in love amid the darkness of this world by the 
tender hand of God. I shall be at the banquet, and 
with the other guests / shall be known and I shall know 
those who divided my cares and doubled my joys. 
This acquaintance, this friendship between God and 
me, this mutual love, all of which has been so sweet, 
will then be the chief memory of my earthly pilgrim- 
age. All the smoke and dust upon the glass through 
which I shall have so long looked will have been wiped 
away, and / shall see Him face to face. 

He tells me now that I am a son — adopted. He does 
not tell me what I shall be — only I shall be like Him. 
There will then to me be no place for prayer, for I shall 
have no wants. My mind shall sweep the universe 
with perfect freedom and thought shall never tire, my 
energies shall move unclogged with divine activity, and 
all my being shall render perpetual adoration unto Him 
with whom I have walked and suffered long, and then 
we will walk unhindered together and talk as friend 
talks with friend. His presence will be my chiefest 
glory, and to praise Him will be my highest joy. Then 
I shall move at His dictates like the tides of the sea 
and the stars of the sky, and no more discord shall ever 
come between God and me. 




AN EVENING PRAYER 



MY Father, the day is done, with 
its toils, vexations, privileges and 
service, and weary in soul and 
body, I come to Thy holy throne 
of peace and pity. ^ Thou hast shared my 
cares, felt each pang that cut my heart and 
stood for me in every strife. Forget my wrongs, 
and let this day's sunset be the seal to my for- 
giveness of every one who has wronged me. 
€| Out of Thy grace, give me the secret of never 
being discouraged, teach me how to strengthen 
all my weaknesses, and make me to see that 
my sacrifice for another and the control of my- 
self belong to my ministry of love. ^ Cover 
my bed with Thy unseen glory, and let me fall 
to sleep with a consciousness that Thine eyes 
are over me and that my room is aglow with 
Thy presence. ^ Then I shall rest, and out of 
my repose I shall be ready to serve Thee 
better in the morning of the morrow. ^ Amen. 



MAY T 1908 



fcv 



J 



